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Lisbon was perfect in title matches, crowning four champions and capturing the team title Saturday at the Mount Vernon Invitational. The Class 1A third-ranked Lions tallied 221 points, 16 ahead of runner-up Davenport Assumption.

Top-ranked Cael Happel (126), No. 7 Robert Avila Jr. (132), top-ranked 138-pounder Cobe Siebrecht and No. 8 Ryne Mohrfeld at 145 won their brackets and make up a potent part of the Lions’ lineup.

“Cael has been wrestling lights out, as well as Robert and Cobe. Ryne is a tough kid. A big win for him.”

Happel, Avila and Siebrecht were dominant in the finals. Happel handled Louisa-Muscatine’s Cody Calvelage 16-1 in the final. Siebrecht needed just 29 seconds to deck West Liberty’s Talen Dengler for gold, pinning his way through the bracket.

Avila, a freshman, was impressive. He scored nine takedowns in the championship for a 21-7 major decision over Assumption’s Jacob Felderman, ranked 10th in 2A.

“I felt pretty good today,” Avila said. “I felt I could have moved my feet more but overall it was a good. I’m just glad I could showcase my talent and got a couple good wins.”

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Avila opened with a fall and closed with 37 total points in his last two bouts against ranked foes. He trounced Wapello’s Daniel Meeker, a returning state finalist who is top-ranked at 126. Avila said he is at best when he is offensive.

“That’s my style,” Avila said. “If I could score 100 points that is what I’m aiming for. Just keep going and going, pushing the pace non-stop.”

Like Avila, Mohrfeld beat a ranked opponent in the final. Mohrfeld scored a third-period takedown for an 8-6 victory over Dyersville Beckman’s No. 9 Grant Hoeger in the final.

“It feels good,” Mohrfeld said. “It’s a confidence boost for sure, but there’s always more work to do.”

Mohrfeld’s match was a back-and-forth affair. Mohr earned the first takedown but Hoeger took a 3-2 lead before the second period. Mohrfeld sandwiched a takedown between two escapes for a 6-5 edge before the third. Hoeger tied the score, but Mohrfeld willed himself to the decisive score.

“In the last match, that guy was really strong,” Ryan said. “I had to tire him out a little bit. I’ve got to score where I can get points.

“It was fun, that’s for sure.”

West Liberty’s Coy Ruess and Austin Beaver won titles at 152 and 160, respectively.

Tristin Westphal-Edwards, of Washington (Iowa) pinned Assumption’s fifth-ranked Kole Kreinbring in the 182 final. Westphal-Edwards, ranked second at 170, had bookend pins and a semifinal major decision.